- Bathsheba W. Smith
__NOTOC__Bathsheba Wilson Bigler Smith (
3 May 1822 –20 September 1910 ) was an early member of theLatter Day Saint movement . She was the fourth general president of theRelief Society ofThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), a matron of theSalt Lake Temple , a member of the Board of Directors of Deseret Hospital,Salt Lake City, Utah , and a leader in the westernUnited States woman's suffrage movement.Biography
Born near Shinnston, Harrison County, Virginia (now West Virginia), she was the daughter of Mark Bigler and Susanna Ogden. These excerpts from her autobiography tell how the her family moved from Virginia, first to Missouri, and then to Illinois:
:“My brother, Jacob G. Bigler, having gone to Far West, Missouri, joined the church there and bought a farm for my father, and then returned.”
:“About this time my father sold his farm in West Virginia, and fitted out my mother, my brother and sister Sarah, Melissa and myself, and we started for Far West, Missouri, in company with my two brothers-in-law and my uncle and their families.
:“Father stayed to settle up his business intending to join us at Far West in the spring, bringing with him, by water, farming implements [and] house furniture.
:“Three nights after we had arrived at the farm which my brother had bought, and which was four miles south of the city of Far West, word came that a mob were gathering on Crooked River, and a call was made for men to go out...for the purpose of trying to stop...the mob, who were...destroying and burning property. Cap. David Patten's company went, and a battle ensued.
:“My father had to lose what he had paid on his farm. And in February 1838, in the depth of winter, our family and thousands of the Saints were on the way to the State of Illinois. In the spring, father joined us at Quincy, Illinois.”
On September 23, 1839, her father, Mark Bigler, died in Quincy.
:“In the spring of 1840, our family moved to Nauvoo, in Illinois.”
In Nauvoo, Illinois on
25 July 1841 , Bathsheba Bigler marriedGeorge A. Smith who was the youngest member of theQuorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints at that time. Smith kept a diary and sketchbook for most of her life which included drawings of prominent members of the Latter Day Saint community. Among the best known is a profile of church presidentJoseph Smith, Jr .During the succession crisis that occurred after the assassination of Smith, Bathsheba Smith, her husband and two children joined the Latter Day Saint group following
Brigham Young . They traveled west and established themselves first in Salt Lake City and then in southern Utah. During the early 1870s, George A. Smith served as first counselor in the Church Presidency under Young. He and his wife traveled to many emerging Mormon settlements, preaching and promoting church affairs.After the death of her husband in 1875, Smith became active in civic affairs and heavily involved in the
women's suffrage movement. She was called to serve as general president of the church's women's organization, theRelief Society in 1901 and served in the position until her death in 1910.ee also
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Annie Taylor Hyde References
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*External links
* [http://www.lib.utah.edu/spc/mss/ms36/ms36.html George A. Smith Family Papers, University of Utah]
* [http://www.lib.utah.edu/spc/mss/ms267/267.html Autobiography of Bathsheba W. Smith, University of Utah ]
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